Business Standard

Understand­ing the microplast­ics threat

- PROSENJIT DATTA The writer is former editor of Business Today and Businesswo­rld, and founder of Prosaic view, an editorial consultanc­y

The history of synthetic plastics can be traced back to the middle of the 19th century. As with any invention, the discovery of synthetic plastics started as a quest to find a solution to some problems — in this case, the reduced availabili­ty of tortoise shells, and elephant ivory, used predominan­tly for making combs, billiard balls, piano keys, etc, in the 19th century. Demand for piano keys, billiard balls, and combs was going up in Europe even while getting hold of elephant tusks and tortoise shells was becoming more difficult as their population dwindled.

A chemist named Alexander Parkes is credited with having created the first real synthetic plastic — Parkesine — in 1862, which quickly became a cheap substitute for tortoise shells and ivory in some products.

Belgian chemist Leo Baekeland created Bakelite, the first all-purpose fully synthetic plastic in 1907. After that, developmen­t was rapid as big corporatio­ns in the US and the UK such as BASF, Du Pont, Imperial Chemical Industries, and Dow Chemicals poured money into research, product developmen­t, and marketing. World War II would see plastics coming into their own — being used in everything from parachutes to radar cabling to wheels of vehicles and aircraft. Post WW II, the civilian use of plastics would explode. Nylon, Rayon, Polystyren­e, PET, and Teflon would find uses in everything from clothing to food packaging.

Plastic usage would boom for decades before scientists, policymake­rs, and citizens would wake up to the unpleasant fact that what made plastics so useful was also the reason they were polluting the earth — plastics were indestruct­ible. They did not decompose, disintegra­te, or degrade for decades or centuries. Discarded plastics simply accumulate in landfills and oceans, becoming an environmen­tal disaster.

Knowing there is a problem and finding a solution for it are two different things. Though the dangers that discarded plastics pose for Earth are now well establishe­d, no satisfacto­ry solution has been found. The quest for solutions has simply not received the kind of support or resources it should have. There are more interestin­g areas to research, even in biochemist­ry and microbiolo­gy. From time to time, announceme­nts of bacteria that consume and break down plastics have been made but few have led to large-scale plants. Other methods such as photo-oxidation have also not been able to scale up. Policies, meanwhile, have typically focused on reducing the use of plastics — though they have not been very successful in most countries, given that alternativ­es to synthetic plastics are not easily available or cheap.

Over the past two decades, a fresh worry has cropped up — the ubiquity of micro and nano-plastics. While plastics take decades to degrade, they do break into pieces and release tiny plastic pieces, often too small to detect with the naked eye. Over the past decade, researcher­s have discovered to their horror that micro and nanoplasti­cs are everywhere — in the soil, in oceans and rivers, in marine and land lifeforms, and, increasing­ly, in human organs, from the blood vessels to the respirator­y system, the liver and even the placenta.

How dangerous are microplast­ics to humans? Research on this is only beginning to take place now. Initial studies point to long-term dangers but their precise nature and the quantifica­tion will take time to establish. There is some evidence that plastics can give rise to inflammati­on in the body — with all the attendant issues that come with it. There is conjecture that chemicals of nanoplasti­cs in various body organs would lead to all sorts of problems, including cancer. Other studies have shown that micro and nanoplasti­cs in the circulator­y system could lead to an increase in cardiovasc­ular risk.

However, simply not enough research has taken place yet to link micro and nanoplasti­cs to diseases and life expectancy. But then, these take a long time to establish — for example, we did not understand the dangers of air pollution to the human body till fairly recently.

A lot more research funding and studies are needed in this area. Particular­ly the dangers they pose to babies and small children or even pregnant women. Also to those who are suffering from multiple morbiditie­s.

Other studies are needed to figure out how to deal with the diseases and inflammati­on that microplast­ics may cause our bodies. More studies are needed on their effect on ocean and riverine life forms as well as plants and animals on land.

Unfortunat­ely, while a few countries are taking note — Canada has allocated a couple of million dollars, for example — it is an area that is neither attracting huge private nor public funding. The reason is simple enough. Other research areas are promising better returns on investment for the private sector. Business opportunit­ies from artificial intelligen­ce or new battery chemistrie­s are easier to discern and therefore get funding of billions of dollars. Studying the dangers of microplast­ics to humans does not seem to promise great new business opportunit­ies.

Indeed, unless some Silicon Valley billionair­e decides that microplast­ics can reduce his life expectancy, it is unlikely that this will attract big private money for research. As far as policymake­rs are concerned, there are enough problems of global warming and digital technologi­es to deal with before they get around to this long-term danger. And that is a pity — because until things reach a boiling point, no one wants to search for solutions.

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